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They're all correct, Anon. The word gotten is generally used as the past participle of the verb "get" in American English, and got is used as the past participle in British English. Thus your first sentence seems to be AmE, and the
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Does everything have to be in full sentences? I mean African Americans have their own English lingos and they can describe a whole paragraph in a few words. What's the difference between Black English and Standard American English?
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I agree with Wordy. Many, many years ago, a comma was needed in BrE. Nowadays, there is, indeed, a difference between British and American English. In AmE a comma is needed, but in BrE, a comma is no longer required. Other examples are is Mr,
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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yoong liat
133 days ago
American English, Difference Between, Colons, Commas, Punctuation, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Salutations, Languages
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what is the difference between British and American English?
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Hi Vctory Ong There is possibly a difference between British English and American English in this case. I would only use "travel expenses".
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Hi Hohhot! I'm glad to see a Mongolian from Inner Mongolia here. I'm from the independent Mongolia. And I've been to the Inner Mongolian border city, Erenhot, en route to Beijing. I heard people speaking Inner Mongolian there and it
ESL Chat, Make Friends, Meet Friendly People
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bay_dmts
154 days ago
Difference Between, Accents, American English, British English, Chat, Languages, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, China, United States, Speaking, American, Colours
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Hi AlpheccaStars and Mr. Wordy,
Thanks for you help.
One American client says to me: a celebration dinner, while I saw a post in Yahoo, saying Beckham is having a celebratory dinner.
Do you think it's probably because the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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tinanam0102
197 days ago
American English, Difference Between, Nouns, British English, Paragraphs, Adjectives, Writing, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Colours, American, Languages, Samples
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This should answer your question: What is the difference between learned and learnt? These are alternative forms of the past tense and past participle of the verb learn. Learnt is more common in British English, and learned in American
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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anonymous
201 days ago
American English, Difference Between, Tenses, Numbers, British English, Past Tenses, Writing, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Languages
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Could anybody tell me how to differentiate between them ?
1. "go to school "and "go to the school" Go to school refers to going to do the activity (studying, being in class, etc.) and does not indicate a particular building
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Hi, I'd like to know the difference between the usage of "bike" and "cycle" as verbs in American English. I was nonplussed when some college friends couldn't understand the sentence "I cycle to work." One
ESL Vocabulary and Idioms
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shu_uemura
270 days ago
American English, Difference Between, Sentences, Relationships, Friendships, Usages, Friends, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Languages
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